A philosophy for life
- Live
life according to nature.
- Live
life according to reason.
- Understand
what is good, bad and what does not matter.
- See
isolation as the opportunity for self-improvement; every moment as a
moment to expand your mind and evolve, as is your nature.
- Apply
reason to every possible circumstance – a transaction of goods and
services, a moral decision – and take a meaningful outcome.
- The
less you control, the freer you become. The liberated man is the man freed
of all encumbancies, material and emotional.
- Understand
your place in nature. You are but one part of an unfathomably huge
organism that is the universe; and you yourself are an organism made of an
unfathomably huge number of other organisms. You cannot control the things
in the universe, in nature; but you can control how you act upon them. And
how you act, if you act with reason, can make you a better person.
- Consider
the men that have died with great wealth, but are lacking in true
happiness. They might think they have wealth before them, but in their
heart, they are far poorer than a joyful bum.
- If
you cannot control it, then it does not matter – be indifferent to the
indifferent things in life. You gain things, you lose things,
circumstances change. Life is fickle, but with reason you can learn to
ride circumstance to your better nature. Make the most of circumstance.
- Your
senses act on impulse; your mind acts on reason. Use your mind at every
point.
- Even
when you are gone, you will still be a continual part of nature.
- To
be happy, all you need is a well-reasoned mind.
- Remember:
possessions have no memory. When you lose them they do not pity their lost
owner, or any of their owners. They do not try to find you when you
misplace them. Anything above self-sustainance is mere luxury, and
wasteful. To be self-sufficient is to act in accordance with nature. Have
doubt on the artificial world – of materials, of presumed ethics, of
pleasures. Seek your life through nature, and real value, and joy, will
come automatically.
- Reason
all possibilities: drink if you are thirsty, eat if you are hungry, buy
things if you need them. But understand, a human only needs these few
things to survive. Your mind may always be hungry for more – knowledge is
a good thing. But only commit action to something if it benefits your body
and mind. Excess, although pleasurable, is not beneficial: in the long –
term, it can shorten your life. Money is only good if it is necessary to
the functioning of your body and mind. But money is also the path to
excess and wastefulness. Waste should be your enemy – avoid it at every
turn. Be content to live by your needs, not your desires. You live for
reason, and reason should be your guide.
- Have
you ever seen the look on someone’s face when they are eating or drinking?
All expression is lost; what they are doing becomes an act of instinct,
without thought or emotion. People think that pleasure is meant to be
gained from sustainance, but it is merely an act of nature – pleasure is
incidental. And when people gorge themselves on food and drink, the
supposed pleasureable act is lost to their face – so why do it at all?
- Being
indifferent does not mean not caring; it means not worrying or letting
things out of your hands overly concern or distract you. Wealth is
preferable to poverty, and good health is better than illness – but these
things are constantly changing in nature. If you are fortunate to have
wealth then do not squander it on useless things, but put it to good
reason. But, conversely, do not complain when wealth deserts you – your
wealth is only temporary. You will die one day, but your wealth and
possesions can be used by anyone and outlive you. Do not let the
indifferent rule your life – for your life will also become indifferent; a
non-entity to history, quickly forgotten, and wasted. Put your life not to
indifferent matters, but to reason. Put your life to good use, for your
life is less than the blink of an eye to the constant stream of time.
Perform good actions, not for the sake of your reputation or vanity, but
because good actions would be returned onto you – bad actions would have
precisely the same effect. If you dislike people, people will dislike you
back. A person that commits bad acts, even when they have good fortune,
always lives in fear – a good person always lives with a clear conscience.
- People
sweat, worry and crave for artificial and unnecessary desires of their own
making. In an office job, it is impossible to avoid the nature of “office
politics”: the constant power play between workers as they each try to get
one better than the other. It’s corrosive and damaging – and for what? A
little more money, to buy a better car or a bigger house, or an expensive
sofa. Why can’t these people just
be happy with their natural faculties and needs? The things they become so
corrosive over, begin to corrode their own natural freedoms, so that they
feel unable to live without these pointless and irrelevant things. Then
they die, with all these things around them, trophies of their “success”,
thinking they were “winners”, when deep down they know they are unhappy.
Why? Because natural needs are limited to nature, but artificial needs are
infinite.
- Always
test yourself and question the way of the world. Only by testing will you
find the path to true knowledge and the ultimate truth. Complacency of
knowledge and the truth leads to ignorance. Ignorance should be your enemy
if you are to find the path to true reason. Never accept a view unless it
is vindicated by true reason and meaning.
- Look
around and consider the people you see. As long as their is greed in the
world, suffering exists elsewhere: this state is against nature, for greed
is not a natural act, and it goes against the principle of reason. This
state becomes even more unnecessary and evil when you consider the levels
of hardship that must exist in order to support the levels of greed. You
can therefore imply that nature could easily provide for the human
condition, were people able to exist on reason. For all the greed would be
gone, and all needs would be satisfied.
- Understand
that gold is worthless, success is vanity – distrust your senses and
instincts.
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